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Angioma clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04336163 Terminated - Rosacea Clinical Trials

Skin Imaging to Inform Laser Treatments

Start date: September 20, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to obtain information (such as lesion depth, depth of the most superficial part of the lesion, and the size and density of blood vessels) with the assistance of an imaging device, and use this information to assist in selection of laser settings for the treatment of skin conditions. The imaging modality is called Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT). Multiple laser modalities will be used, including intense pulsed light lasers (BroadBand Light, Profractional Sciton), pulsed dye lasers (Vbeam Perfecta, Candela), long-pulse 755nm lasers (GentleLASE, Candela), Sciton long-pulse 1064nm lasers, and non-ablative and ablative fractional resurfacing lasers (Profractional, Sciton). All of the lasers noted above are the only ones that will be used in this study. These lasers have 510k clearance and are being used as per their approved indications in this study. The choice of laser type is based on the skin lesion and is recommended by the physician, and the subjects who are going to enroll in this study will already be planned to undergo laser treatment as a standard of care for their condition. This is a pilot study that will explore the utility of skin imaging in guiding the laser treatment of skin lesions.

NCT ID: NCT03674346 Not yet recruiting - Angioma Clinical Trials

Efficacy of Hypnoanalgesia by a Radiologist Technologist in Children With Cutaneous Angioma Treated With Sclerosis in Interventional Radiology

HYP-ANGE
Start date: January 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study highlights the global management of the various components of outpatient pain by hypnoanalgesia (pain management by hypnosis) in radiopediatrics. Indeed, pain is induced by sclerosis of cutaneous angiomas in interventional radiology. It is managed by MEOPA (an equimolar mixture of oxygen nitrous oxide) or by general anesthesia. For four years, the medical electroradiology technologist of the Mother and Child Hospital (HFME) of the Hospices Civils de Lyon offer patients in addition a pain management by hypnoanalgesia. The investigator propose a multicenter open randomized study comparing two pain management strategies, in children aged 7 to 18 years treated for cutaneous angioma by sclerosis in interventional radiology at the HFME. The two strategies studied are: Hypnoanalgesia and MEOPA (the reference strategy). The main objective is to evaluate the efficacy of hypnoanalgesia compared to the standard of care of pain, which is the use of MEOPA, in the treatment of sclerosis of cutaneous angioma in pediatric interventional radiology.